Thread: pg_postmaster_reload_time() patch

pg_postmaster_reload_time() patch

From
"George Gensure"
Date:
I've done a quick write up for reload time reporting from the
administration TODO.  I was a little paranoid with the locking, but
didn't want problems to occur with signals on the postmaster and the
read side.

-George

Attachment

Re: pg_postmaster_reload_time() patch

From
"Gurjeet Singh"
Date:
On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 9:53 AM, George Gensure <werkt0@gmail.com> wrote:
I've done a quick write up for reload time reporting from the
administration TODO.  I was a little paranoid with the locking, but
didn't want problems to occur with signals on the postmaster and the
read side.


IMHO, the function should return NULL if the postmaster never reloaded; that is, it was started, but never signaled to reload.

Best regards,
--
gurjeet[.singh]@EnterpriseDB.com
singh.gurjeet@{ gmail | hotmail | indiatimes | yahoo }.com

EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com

Mail sent from my BlackLaptop device

Re: pg_postmaster_reload_time() patch

From
"Heikki Linnakangas"
Date:
Gurjeet Singh wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 9:53 AM, George Gensure <werkt0@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I've done a quick write up for reload time reporting from the
>> administration TODO.  I was a little paranoid with the locking, but
>> didn't want problems to occur with signals on the postmaster and the
>> read side.
>>
>>
> IMHO, the function should return NULL if the postmaster never reloaded; that
> is, it was started, but never signaled to reload.

I think it's useful to get the server startup time if the configuration
has never been reloaded. That's when the configuration was loaded, if no
reload has been triggered since. Perhaps the function should be named to
reflect that better. pg_configuration_load_time() ?

--
   Heikki Linnakangas
   EnterpriseDB   http://www.enterprisedb.com

Re: pg_postmaster_reload_time() patch

From
Alvaro Herrera
Date:
George Gensure escribió:
> I've done a quick write up for reload time reporting from the
> administration TODO.  I was a little paranoid with the locking, but
> didn't want problems to occur with signals on the postmaster and the
> read side.

I'd say too much -- postmaster runs with signals blocked all the time
(except during select()) so this is not necessary there.

Regarding the locking on backends, I admit I am not sure if this is
really a problem enough that you need a spinlock for it.  Anyway we tend
not to use spinlocks too much -- probably an LWLock would be more
apropos, if a lock is really needed.  (A bigger question is whether the
reload time should be local for each backend, or exposed globally
through MyProc.  I don't think it's interesting enough to warrant that,
but perhaps others think differently.)

Lastly, I didn't read the patch close enough to tell if it would work on
both the EXEC_BACKEND case and the regular one.

--
Alvaro Herrera                                http://www.CommandPrompt.com/
The PostgreSQL Company - Command Prompt, Inc.

Re: pg_postmaster_reload_time() patch

From
"George Gensure"
Date:
On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 8:16 AM, Alvaro Herrera
<alvherre@commandprompt.com> wrote:
> George Gensure escribió:
>
>
> > I've done a quick write up for reload time reporting from the
>  > administration TODO.  I was a little paranoid with the locking, but
>  > didn't want problems to occur with signals on the postmaster and the
>  > read side.
>
>  I'd say too much -- postmaster runs with signals blocked all the time
>  (except during select()) so this is not necessary there.
>
>  Regarding the locking on backends, I admit I am not sure if this is
>  really a problem enough that you need a spinlock for it.  Anyway we tend
>  not to use spinlocks too much -- probably an LWLock would be more
>  apropos, if a lock is really needed.  (A bigger question is whether the
>  reload time should be local for each backend, or exposed globally
>  through MyProc.  I don't think it's interesting enough to warrant that,
>  but perhaps others think differently.)
>
>  Lastly, I didn't read the patch close enough to tell if it would work on
>  both the EXEC_BACKEND case and the regular one.
>
>  --
>  Alvaro Herrera                                http://www.CommandPrompt.com/
>  The PostgreSQL Company - Command Prompt, Inc.
>

I've reworked the patch in response to comments.

The new function name is pg_conf_load_time()
I'm now using LWLocks only on the backend in order to protect the
PgReloadTime from mid copy reads.  This may prove to be unnecessary,
since the code to handle HUPs seems to be executed synchronously on
the backend, but I'll let someone else tell me its safe before
removing it.

-George

Attachment

Re: pg_postmaster_reload_time() patch

From
"George Gensure"
Date:
On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 12:58 PM, George Gensure <werkt0@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 8:16 AM, Alvaro Herrera
>  <alvherre@commandprompt.com> wrote:
>
>
> > George Gensure escribió:
>  >
>  >
>  > > I've done a quick write up for reload time reporting from the
>  >  > administration TODO.  I was a little paranoid with the locking, but
>  >  > didn't want problems to occur with signals on the postmaster and the
>  >  > read side.
>  >
>  >  I'd say too much -- postmaster runs with signals blocked all the time
>  >  (except during select()) so this is not necessary there.
>  >
>  >  Regarding the locking on backends, I admit I am not sure if this is
>  >  really a problem enough that you need a spinlock for it.  Anyway we tend
>  >  not to use spinlocks too much -- probably an LWLock would be more
>  >  apropos, if a lock is really needed.  (A bigger question is whether the
>  >  reload time should be local for each backend, or exposed globally
>  >  through MyProc.  I don't think it's interesting enough to warrant that,
>  >  but perhaps others think differently.)
>  >
>  >  Lastly, I didn't read the patch close enough to tell if it would work on
>  >  both the EXEC_BACKEND case and the regular one.
>  >
>  >  --
>  >  Alvaro Herrera                                http://www.CommandPrompt.com/
>  >  The PostgreSQL Company - Command Prompt, Inc.
>  >
>
>  I've reworked the patch in response to comments.
>
>  The new function name is pg_conf_load_time()
>  I'm now using LWLocks only on the backend in order to protect the
>  PgReloadTime from mid copy reads.  This may prove to be unnecessary,
>  since the code to handle HUPs seems to be executed synchronously on
>  the backend, but I'll let someone else tell me its safe before
>  removing it.
>
>  -George
>

So if nobody's got any further objections, could this patch be applied?

-George

Re: pg_postmaster_reload_time() patch

From
Alvaro Herrera
Date:
George Gensure escribió:

> So if nobody's got any further objections, could this patch be applied?

It's in the queue:

http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/CommitFest:May

--
Alvaro Herrera                                http://www.CommandPrompt.com/
The PostgreSQL Company - Command Prompt, Inc.

Re: pg_postmaster_reload_time() patch

From
"George Gensure"
Date:
On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 10:31 AM, Alvaro Herrera
<alvherre@commandprompt.com> wrote:
> George Gensure escribió:
>
>
>  > So if nobody's got any further objections, could this patch be applied?
>
>  It's in the queue:
>
>  http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/CommitFest:May
>
>  --
>
>
> Alvaro Herrera                                http://www.CommandPrompt.com/
>  The PostgreSQL Company - Command Prompt, Inc.
>

Thanks!

-George

Re: pg_postmaster_reload_time() patch

From
Tom Lane
Date:
"George Gensure" <werkt0@gmail.com> writes:
> The new function name is pg_conf_load_time()

Applied with revisions.

> I'm now using LWLocks only on the backend in order to protect the
> PgReloadTime from mid copy reads.  This may prove to be unnecessary,
> since the code to handle HUPs seems to be executed synchronously on
> the backend, but I'll let someone else tell me its safe before
> removing it.

The locking was not only entirely useless, but it didn't even compile,
since you'd not supplied a definition for "ReloadTimeLock".  I took
it out.

I moved the setting of PgReloadTime into ProcessConfigFile.
The advantages are (1) only one place to do it, and (2) inside
ProcessConfigFile, we know whether or not the reload actually "took".
As committed, the definition of PgReloadTime is really "the time of
the last *successful* load of postgresql.conf", which I think is more
useful than "the last attempted load".

I also improved the documentation a bit and added the copy step needed
in restore_backend_variables().

            regards, tom lane